The project is called "Array of Things." It is meant to help create a system making city navigation as easy as possible. By sensing that cars are at a standstill, it can sense traffic patterns, and suggest where a bike lane might be best suited. By gathering air quality data, areas of air pollution and high pollen areas can be avoided.

Charlie Catlett, director of the Center for Computation and Data at the University of Chicago and Argonne National Laboratory, told USA Today, "The whole project is, how can you get the city to be more helpful to people by telling us about itself?" Catlett is leading the project, a partnership with the city of Chicago.

Right now, Catlett is still working on developing the first prototype. After the perfect device is settled on, the sensors will be placed in boxes, covered with a decorative aluminum shield, and attached to light poles. The data will be made public, allowing developers to create applications based on the wind, heat, precipitation and other information recorded.

One of the most unique things the sensors will track are the number of Wi-Fi and Bluetooth devices in a 100-foot range. This will be tracked to estimate the number of passing pedestrians. While this brings up logical privacy concerns, Catlett clarified that the sensors cannot detect specific device information or IP addresses.

While the project does seem a bit sci-fi, and certainly reminiscent of the futuristic video game, it does offer the ability for Chicago to become one of the most successfully digitally connected cities in the country, and to make great, public use of big data.